"After months of secret negotiations, a shadowy Russian bilked American spies out of $100,000 last year, promising to deliver stolen National Security Agency cyberweapons in a deal that he insisted would also include compromising material on President Trump, according to American and European intelligence officials.
The
cash, delivered in a suitcase to a Berlin hotel room in September, was
intended as the first installment of a $1 million payout, according to
American officials, the Russian and communications reviewed by The New
York Times. The theft of the secret hacking tools has been devastating to the N.S.A.,, and the agency was struggling to get a full inventory of what was missing.
Several
American intelligence officials said they made clear that they did not
want the Trump material from the Russian, who was suspected of having
murky ties to Russian intelligence and to Eastern European
cybercriminals. He claimed the information would link the president and
his associates to Russia. Instead of providing the hacking tools, the
Russian produced unverified and possibly fabricated information
involving Mr. Trump and others, including bank records, emails and
purported Russian intelligence data.
The
United States intelligence officials said they cut off the deal....
The
Central Intelligence Agency declined to comment on the negotiations
with the Russian seller. The N.S.A., which produced the bulk of the
hacking tools that the Americans sought to recover, said only that “all
N.S.A. employees have a lifetime obligation to protect classified
information.”
The negotiations in Europe last year [2017] were described by American and European intelligence officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a clandestine operation, and the Russian.
The United States officials worked through an intermediary — an American businessman based in Germany — to preserve deniability. There were meetings in provincial German towns where John le CarrĂ© set his early spy novels, and data handoffs in five-star Berlin hotels. American intelligence agencies spent months tracking the Russian’s flights to Berlin, his rendezvous with a mistress in Vienna and his trips home to St. Petersburg, the officials said.
The negotiations in Europe last year [2017] were described by American and European intelligence officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a clandestine operation, and the Russian.
The United States officials worked through an intermediary — an American businessman based in Germany — to preserve deniability. There were meetings in provincial German towns where John le CarrĂ© set his early spy novels, and data handoffs in five-star Berlin hotels. American intelligence agencies spent months tracking the Russian’s flights to Berlin, his rendezvous with a mistress in Vienna and his trips home to St. Petersburg, the officials said.
The N.S.A. even used its official Twitter account to send coded messages to the Russian nearly a dozen times.
The
episode ended this year [2018] with American spies chasing the Russian out of
Western Europe, warning him not to return if he valued his freedom, the
American businessman said. The Trump material was left with the
American, who has secured it in Europe.
The
Russian claimed to have access to a staggering collection of secrets
that included everything from the computer code for the cyberweapons
stolen from the N.S.A. and C.I.A. to what he said was a video of Mr.
Trump consorting with prostitutes in a Moscow hotel room in 2013,
according to American and European officials and the Russian, who agreed
to be interviewed in Germany on the condition of anonymity. There
remains no evidence that such a video exists....
There
were other questions about the Russian’s reliability. He had a history
of money laundering and a thin legitimate cover business — a nearly
bankrupt company that sold portable grills for streetside sausage
salesmen, according to British incorporation papers.
“The distinction between an organized criminal and a Russian intelligence officer and a Russian who knows some Russian intel guys--it all blurs together,” said Steven L. Hall, the former chief of Russia operations at the C.I.A. “This is the difficulty of trying to understand how Russia and Russians operate from the Western viewpoint.”
“The distinction between an organized criminal and a Russian intelligence officer and a Russian who knows some Russian intel guys--it all blurs together,” said Steven L. Hall, the former chief of Russia operations at the C.I.A. “This is the difficulty of trying to understand how Russia and Russians operate from the Western viewpoint.”
American
intelligence officials were also wary of the purported kompromat the
Russian wanted to sell. They saw the information, especially the video,
as the stuff of tabloid gossip pages, not intelligence collection,
American officials said.
But the Americans desperately wanted the hacking tools. The cyberweapons had been built to break into the computer networks of Russia, China, and other rival powers. Instead, they ended up in the hands of a mysterious group calling itself the Shadow Brokers, which has since provided hackers with tools that infected millions of computers around the world, crippling hospitals, factories and businesses.
No officials wanted to refuse information they thought might help determine what had happened.
“That’s
one of the bedeviling things about counterintelligence and the
wilderness that it is — nobody wants to be caught in a position of
saying we wrote that off and then five years later saying, ‘Holy cow, it
was actually a real guy,’” Mr. Hall said....
Rumors that Russian intelligence possesses the video surfaced more than a year ago in an explosive and unverified dossier compiled by a former British spy and paid for by Democrats.
Since then, at least four Russians with espionage and underworld
connections have appeared in Central and Eastern Europe, offering to
sell kompromat to American political operatives, private investigators
and spies that would corroborate the dossier, American and European
intelligence officials said. American officials suspect that at least some of the sellers are working for Russia’s spy services.
The
Times obtained four of the documents that the Russian in Germany tried
to pass to American intelligence (The Times did not pay for the
material). All are purported to be Russian intelligence reports, and
each focuses on associates of Mr. Trump. Carter Page, the former
campaign adviser who has been the focus of F.B.I. investigators,
features in one; Robert and Rebekah Mercer, the billionaire Republican
donors, in another.
Yet
all four appear to be drawn almost entirely from news reports, not
secret intelligence. They all also contain stylistic and grammatical
usages not typically seen in Russian intelligence reports, said Yuri
Shvets, a former K.G.B. officer who spent years as a spy in Washington
before defecting to the United States just before the end of the Cold
War.
American
spies are not the only ones who have dealt with Russians claiming to
have secrets to sell. Cody Shearer, an American political operative with
ties to the Democratic Party, has been crisscrossing Eastern Europe for
more than six months to secure the purported kompromat from a different
Russian, said people familiar with the efforts, speaking on the
condition of anonymity to avoid damaging their relationship with him.
Reached
by phone late last year [2017], Mr. Shearer would say only that his work was
“a big deal — you know what it is, and you shouldn’t be asking about
it.” He then hung up.
Mr.
Shearer’s efforts grew out of work he first began during the 2016
campaign, when he compiled a pair of reports that, like the dossier,
also included talk of a video and Russian payoffs to Trump associates.
It is not clear what, if anything, Mr. Shearer has been able to
purchase."...
[Ed. note: The NY Times article returns to subject of elite NSA hacking tools which are now the world's elite hacking tools and have been used to cripple businesses including hospitals. US intel guys have meetings in Berlin hotel rooms, deal with a hacker in Vienna "known only as Carlo."]
(continuing): "Before
the Americans were negotiating with the Russian, they were dealing with a hacker in Vienna known only to American intelligence officials as
Carlo. In early 2017, he offered to provide them with a full set of
hacking tools that were in the hands of the Shadow Brokers and the names
of other people in his network, American officials said. In exchange,
he wanted immunity from prosecution in the United States."...
[Ed. note: Mercy. Stop. This is humiliating.]
(continuing): "But
the immunity deal fell apart, so intelligence officials decided to do
what spies do best: They offered to buy the data. That is when the
Russian in Germany emerged, telling the Americans he would handle the
sale.
Like Carlo, he had previously dealt with American intelligence operatives, American and European officials said. He served as a fixer, of sorts, brokering deals for Russia’s Federal Security Service, or F.S.B., which is the successor to the Soviet K.G.B. American intelligence officials said that he had a direct link to Nikolai Patrushev, a former F.S.B. director, and that they knew of previous work he had done helping move illicit shipments of semiprecious metals for a Russian oligarch.
Like Carlo, he had previously dealt with American intelligence operatives, American and European officials said. He served as a fixer, of sorts, brokering deals for Russia’s Federal Security Service, or F.S.B., which is the successor to the Soviet K.G.B. American intelligence officials said that he had a direct link to Nikolai Patrushev, a former F.S.B. director, and that they knew of previous work he had done helping move illicit shipments of semiprecious metals for a Russian oligarch.
By
last April [2017] it appeared that a deal was imminent.
to help the agency’s Berlin station handle the operation."...
to help the agency’s Berlin station handle the operation."...
[Ed. note:
Enough! Mercy! You couldn't make up a more embarrassing story if you
tried. It's now clear why top secret material is so easily removed from US intel agencies. All computers should be removed from US intel agencies.]
(continuing): "At
a small bar in the former heart of West Berlin, the Russian handed the
American intermediary a thumb drive with a small cache of data that was
intended to provide a sample of what was to come, American officials
said.
Within
days, though, the deal turned sour. American intelligence agencies
determined that the data was genuinely from the Shadow Brokers, but was
material the group had already made public. As a result, the C.I.A. said
it would not pay for it, American officials said.
The Russian was furious. But negotiations limped on until September [2017], when the two sides agreed to try again.
Late
that month, the American businessman delivered the $100,000 payment.
Some officials said it was United States government money but routed
through an indirect channel.
A
few weeks later, the Russian began handing over data. But in multiple
deliveries in October and December, almost all of what he delivered was
related to the 2016 election and alleged ties between Mr. Trump’s
associates and Russia, not the N.S.A. or C.I.A. hacking tools.
In
December, the Russian said he told the American intermediary that he
was providing the Trump material and holding out on the hacking tools at
the orders of senior Russian intelligence officials.
Early this year [2018], the Americans gave him one last chance. The Russian once again showed up with nothing more than excuses.
Early this year [2018], the Americans gave him one last chance. The Russian once again showed up with nothing more than excuses.
So
the Americans offered him a choice: Start working for them and provide
the names of everyone in his network — or go back to Russia and do not
return."...
[Ed. note: Heavy. "The Americans" really put it to "The Russian."]
(continuing): "The
Russian did not give it much thought. He took a sip of the cranberry
juice he was nursing, picked up his bag and said, “Thank you.” Then he
walked out the door."
.................
"A version of this article appears in print on February 10, 2018, on Page A1 of the New York edition with the headline: U.S. Spies Paid Russian Peddling Trump Secrets"
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/09/us/politics/us-cyberweapons-russia-trump.html
..............
..............
No comments:
Post a Comment